University of Michigan - Dearborn

11/18/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 11/18/2024 09:23

Lecturer Rashid Faisal wants you to remember — and see yourself in — Cornelius Henderson

Two years ago, the University of Michigan announced the launch of the Inclusive History Project, an initiative aimed at studying and documenting the history of the university that's attentive to diversity, equity and inclusion. But UM-Dearborn Education Lecturer and '20 EdD alum Rashid Faisal has been chasing down the life story of a 1911 African American U-M engineering grad for a lot longer than that. When Faisal first learned of Cornelius Henderson in 2006 during a conversation with one of his wife's colleagues, Faisal was surprised he'd never heard of Henderson before, given that African American history is a subject he studies pretty intensely. According to the one-pager he was handed, Henderson was an engineer who was pivotal in two of the most groundbreaking early civil engineering projects in Detroit, the Ambassador Bridge and the Detroit-Windsor Tunnel. The other detail that immediately caught Faisal's attention: Henderson attended one of Faisal's alma maters - the University of Michigan - at a time when it had very few non-white students. "We knew very little about the Black students at the university who attended well before what we would consider the affirmative action era of the 1960s," Faisal explains. "I mean, we're talking about 1906 when Henderson started as a student. What was his life like? What was his experience like? It just opened up this window for me to try to learn more about the early African American students at the university."

When Faisal began that research, he learned of people like George Jewett, who, in the 1890s, became the first African American varsity football player at U-M. And there was Eddie Tolan, a world-record-setting Olympic sprinter who ran track at the university in the 1930s. But Faisal was continually drawn in by the details of Henderson's story. The rough existing sketch of Henderson's life that existed at the time was that he was the only African American student in the engineering college and was a standout student despite being isolated by his white classmates. When Henderson graduated and began looking for work, he was denied by every engineering firm in Detroit - except one, which offered him a janitorial position. Fortunately, a chance encounter with one of his U-M classmates led to a better opportunity: The young man urged Henderson to apply for work at his employer, the Canadian Bridge Company in Windsor. Henderson took the advice and ended up building a career there that spanned 47 years, climbing the company ladder from entry-level draftsman to structural design engineer by the time of the Ambassador Bridge and Detroit-Windsor Tunnel projects.

Education Lecturer Rashid Faisal has been chasing down the story of Cornelius Henderson for nearly two decades. Photo by Annie Barker

That general story alone made Henderson an interesting figure, but Faisal was hungry for more of the textural details of his life. And as he did more research, he often encountered things that complicated the traditional narrative. First and foremost, the young Henderson, the University of Michigan student, was often assumed to be a person who endured isolation as the college's lone Black student. Faisal says one of his professors even described being particularly impressed by Henderson's achievements in mathematics and science because he, unlike his white classmates, did his work "without help." But Faisal says other details of Henderson's life give us reason to question this assumption. Henderson, Faisal says, would have been part of what W.E.B. Dubois often called the "Talented Tenth" - a term for an influential class of early 20th-century African American leaders who were highly educated and dedicated to bettering circumstances for Black Americans. Henderson's father was a college president and considered one of the most highly educated men of his era. His mother was a teacher. His older brother also attended U-M, went to medical school at the Detroit College of Medicine and became a prominent Detroit doctor. And though he was likely the only Black student in the college of engineering, he shared a rich social life with other Black students who were members of the Epsilon Chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, the oldest Black fraternity at U-M. His fraternity brothers included people like Richard Heel, a U-M law student who later mentored Thurgood Marshall. "Henderson came from a certain kind of Black American cultural capital: the Black church, the Black fraternity system and historically Black colleges and universities," Faisal says. "So, from an outsider's point of view, it may have appeared he was doing this all on his own. But just because the culture of support was rendered invisible doesn't mean the culture didn't exist. In many ways, he was part of the elite of American society at that time."

Aside from the Ambassador Bridge and Detroit-Windsor Tunnel, Henderson contributed to a wide variety of projects, including serving as architect and engineer for Memorial Park Cemetery, the first Black cemetery in Detroit. Faisal has uncovered evidence that indicates Henderson was also involved in the construction of multiple apartment buildings and hospitals in the city. Photo courtesy of Rashid Faisal

Faisal thinks recognizing that Henderson's achievement didn't happen in a vacuum is important for a number of reasons. First, he says casting Henderson as exceptional, or doing what he did "without help," feeds the so-called "magical Negro" narrative, a racist trope from the era that framed Black intellectual achievement as unusual. Moreover, in erasing the context for Henderson's admittedly remarkable life and rendering him only as a talented person who overcame obstacles, we make his story less accessible and relatable to contemporary audiences. For example, it's long been a priority for higher education institutions to increase representation of Black students in STEM disciplines. But Faisal says if we're erasing or misrepresenting historical examples like Henderson, we're failing to give today's students the opportunity to see themselves not as trailblazers in a field where they've historically not "belonged," but as part of a long story of achievement in which they are simply the latest chapter. "In the absence of historical memory, we ask students to understand what they're doing as new when we have a blueprint from the past," Faisal says.

Indeed, over his many years as an educator of both K-12 and college students, Faisal has leveraged Henderson's story to challenge students' views of themselves, others and history. He's used Henderson's life as a leaping off point for students to do oral histories of their own families, a project that's led many students to discover unknown family legacies of college attendance, including some first-generation college students who realized they actually aren't the first. In 2016, Faisal led a team of fourth-, fifth- and sixth-graders, who did their own research on Henderson and created a traveling exhibition, which they presented throughout southeast Michigan, including to a class of UM-Dearborn graduate students, and which was on display at the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History for an entire year. Most recently, with support from an Inclusive History Project grant, Faisal asked UM-Dearborn students in his multicultural education course to reckon with the "multiple identity" features of Henderson's life, especially the sometimes conflicting forces of his race and social class. The results were fascinating. Faisal found it interesting, for example, how easily one Arab American engineering student was able to find herself in Henderson's story, as she faced similar challenges as a woman in a predominantly male field. For one white male student, it was a revelation that a Black intellectual class even existed at that time. "I had one student who wondered if maybe the discrimination Henderson faced in looking for a job was based on his language," Faisal recalls. "And I found this so interesting because her comments seemed to be based in certain assumptions of her understanding of the Black vernacular, when in reality, Henderson, because he came from an elite class, probably talked like the rest of the guys in those engineering firms. But I was glad she made that point. It shows that what we see today informs our understanding of the past, and that we often try to understand things that are unfamiliar to us in terms of what is familiar." Faisal says the hope in doing an exercise like this is that students, when they're out in the world working as educators, will approach issues of identity in a more nuanced way. "So when that student is out there teaching her unit on Black history, maybe she won't just reach for Harriet Tubman and Frederick Douglass," Faisal explains. "She'll reach for the lesser-known figures. She'll make the cross-cultural comparisons. And when you do that, the story becomes alive."

Along with Howard Lindsay, Lurine Moncrease and Sharon Sexton, members of the Black Historical Sites Committee at the Detroit Historical Museum, Faisial helped create a new historical marker honoring Henderson in Detroit's Riverside Park. Photo by Annie Barker

Henderson has now been part of Faisal's life for nearly 20 years, and in some ways, he may be reaching the end of what he can do with the historical record. Unfortunately, many of the details of Henderson's engineering achievements were likely lost in a fire that destroyed a significant portion of the Canadian Bridge Company's historical records. But Faisal reckons he's not quite done with Henderson. He's thinking his next project might be a book series on Henderson's life for children and young adults. And he's hopeful that the next round of Inclusive History Project funding will enable him to create a walking tour of sites connected to the history of U-M's early Black students, which would include a new historical markerhonoring Henderson in Detroit's Riverside Park near the Ambassador Bridge. "From my perspective, everything U-M is doing with the Inclusive History Project, it's all positives and no negatives," Faisal says. "I could see this as a project across all major universities with long histories - and I hope they follow our lead."

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Story by Lou Blouin